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Cato tells us that Publius Scipio, who was called Africinus, used to say that he was never less at leisure than when at leisure, or less alone than when alone.
Henry Morley, in Illustrations of English Religion? (1877), p. 417; this has also become paraphrased as if it were direct quote: I'm never less at leisure than when at leisure, or less alone than when alone. | ||